186 research outputs found
Vacuum C-metric and the Gravitational Stark Effect
We study the vacuum C-metric and its physical interpretation in terms of the
exterior spacetime of a uniformly accelerating spherically - symmetric
gravitational source. Wave phenomena on the linearized C-metric background are
investigated. It is shown that the scalar perturbations of the linearized
C-metric correspond to the gravitational Stark effect. This effect is studied
in connection with the Pioneer anomaly.Comment: New version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
The Lifshitz-Khalatnikov Kasner index parametrization and the Weyl Tensor
The scale invariant Petrov classification of the Weyl tensor is linked to the
scale invariant combination of the Kasner index constraints, and the
Lifshitz-Khalatnikov Kasner index parametrization scheme turns out to be a
natural way of adapting to this symmetry, while hiding the permutation symmetry
that is instead made manifest by the Misner parametrization scheme. While not
so interesting for the Kasner spacetime by itself, it gives a geometrical
meaning to the famous Kasner map transitioning between Kasner epochs and Kasner
eras, equivalently bouncing between curvature walls, in the BLK-Mixmaster
dynamics exhibited by spatially homogeneous cosmologies approaching the initial
cosmological singularity and the inhomogeneous generalization of this dynamics.Comment: 16 page Latex cimento.cls formatted document with 6 EPS figures annd
2 PicTeX figures; to appear in the Proceedings of the First Italian-Pakistan
Workshop on Relativistic Astrophysics which will be published as a special
issue of Nuovo Cimento
Extended bodies with quadrupole moment interacting with gravitational monopoles: reciprocity relations
An exact solution of Einstein's equations representing the static
gravitational field of a quasi-spherical source endowed with both mass and mass
quadrupole moment is considered. It belongs to the Weyl class of solutions and
reduces to the Schwarzschild solution when the quadrupole moment vanishes. The
geometric properties of timelike circular orbits (including geodesics) in this
spacetime are investigated. Moreover, a comparison between geodesic motion in
the spacetime of a quasi-spherical source and non-geodesic motion of an
extended body also endowed with both mass and mass quadrupole moment as
described by Dixon's model in the gravitational field of a Schwarzschild black
hole is discussed. Certain "reciprocity relations" between the source and the
particle parameters are obtained, providing a further argument in favor of the
acceptability of Dixon's model for extended bodies in general relativity.Comment: 14 pages, Latex svjour2.cls article class, 7 eps figure files. To
appear on General Relativity and Gravitation, 200
A note on stress-driven anisotropic diffusion and its role in active deformable media
We propose a new model to describe diffusion processes within active
deformable media. Our general theoretical framework is based on physical and
mathematical considerations, and it suggests to use diffusion tensors directly
coupled to mechanical stress. A proof-of-concept experiment and the proposed
generalised reaction-diffusion-mechanics model reveal that initially isotropic
and homogeneous diffusion tensors turn into inhomogeneous and anisotropic
quantities due to the intrinsic structure of the nonlinear coupling. We study
the physical properties leading to these effects, and investigate mathematical
conditions for its occurrence. Together, the experiment, the model, and the
numerical results obtained using a mixed-primal finite element method, clearly
support relevant consequences of stress-assisted diffusion into anisotropy
patterns, drifting, and conduction velocity of the resulting excitation waves.
Our findings also indicate the applicability of this novel approach in the
description of mechano-electrical feedback in actively deforming bio-materials
such as the heart
Gaze and Gestures in Telepresence: multimodality, embodiment, and roles of collaboration
This paper proposes a controlled experiment to further investigate the
usefulness of gaze awareness and gesture recognition in the support of
collaborative work at a distance. We propose to redesign experiments conducted
several years ago with more recent technology that would: a) enable to better
study of the integration of communication modalities, b) allow users to freely
move while collaborating at a distance and c) avoid asymmetries of
communication between collaborators.Comment: Position paper, International Workshop New Frontiers in Telepresence
2010, part of CSCW2010, Savannah, GA, USA, 7th of February, 2010.
http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/events/nft2010
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